J. Bradford DeLong is Professor of Economics at the University of California at Berkeley and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. He was Deputy Assistant US Treasury Secretary during the Clinton Administration, where he was heavily involved in budget and trade negotiatio… read more

Comments

There will be costs for the kind of divisive politics the United States has been entertaining for a decade now. But, it's the same leadership on display across the Atlantic.

I think, this displays some myopia with regards the period for which slow and zero growth economies will remain influential. But for leading export-led emerging giants, this is a sort of "it's our fiscal cliff, but your problem." Read more

after reading this comment I arrived at the conclusion that even the most sophisticated american economics professors at the most sophisticated US universities do not know anymore to formulate an efficient policy strategy to overcome the actual " big recession" in the biggest economy of the world; that's dreadful for economic science as also Nobel price economists. Read more

Interesting. Why did you conclude that? From where I sit, we know very well how to overcome the big recession--but there are a lot of bad and underbriefed actors sending fake messages and confusing people, and assembling the political coalition is very hard. Read more

What Washington does has consequences out in the country. But the country does not seem to believe it. So I suspect the country has to "feel it" and then push back on Washington.

Tens of millions of people are going to need more than just Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid. I suspect the Republicans know this and simply don't want to pay for it. So they work to lock in ceilings now.

So the Republicans have two goals: lock in low tax rates for the wealthy and spending ceilings on the lower half of the income distribution. These positions will only be overcome by brute political power, not by sweet reason.

The Republican goal is actually recession, which is a form of austerity. Let's see if their big business allies really want to go down this road! Read more

You mix two crisis: First an inevitable economic downturn and the political turmoil that would emerge from it, second a republican policy crisis which promotes extremism. You have a government which supports terrorism, torture and assinations abroad and an insane opposition which makes it look the lesser evil. Where is "conservative" conservatism in the US? Read more

Betwixt a market that already believes that the fiscal derangement has been avoided and the rising tide of reports that show that compromise is mired by a dithering polity that flourishes on the hopes of an economic revival that is not based on equity and responsibility, but in a recurring rent seeking at the back of far less modest monetary policy that pushes products and services in the expectation of a demand, which falters time and again to actually happen.

Why call it recessive politics, this is the process that gets the majority to select the best amongst the worst, while the divide is orchestrated over gigabytes of media space and funded by a transparence? Continuation of the divide whether for better or worse is a part of democracy through discussion, as long as it is under the aegis of a public scrutiny.

"let us hope that it will be short and shallow"... I heartily disagree to this notion of "hoping". This is what got everybody into this financial mess. We have consistently closed our eyes tightly and have hoped that all the imbalance in our economic system would somehow go away. Now let's consider that we don't have an economic system separate from any other on this planet. All countries sink or swim together in today's interconnected climate. The problems has always been exploitation and excess. This activity has spread across the entire globe and now we are at the natural end to this system. The more third world economies grow, the less they will tolerate exploitation and this is actually progress. We're ready for something totally new, a world in which balance and cooperation is more important than profits and exploitation. It is destined to happen either by our global creative effort or after a natural collapse. In the wake of this economic configuration we humans have also created imbalance socially and environmentally. May we open our eyes bravely and face the facts! Read more

The way things work is that usually there is an objective, absolute state, and than there is the perception of it.For example somebody can be very sick, even terminally sick which is obvious to others, but the person himself still thinks he is healthy or maybe a little sick but everything is going to be better by itself as time goes by.It is the same with the US and humanity in general.We have been talking about climate change, how it will change the weather, our life, and suddenly now we realize it is not going to happen in some faraway future, we are already living through it, hammered by it in a very unpredictable manner.We are talking about peak oil, depleted natural resources sometime in the future, the truth is those changes are already upon us, and very significant lack of resources, including water and food resource shortages will hit us very soon, very much within the lifetime of this generation.We are talking about financial and economical crisis, political recession happening soon, the truth is we are already in it, simply more and more layers of makeup, cosmetic surgery is holding the rotten body together, but in many very real countries the life of the public is affected by it very severely day to day, and this is spreading fast all over the globe.The great American soap opera, highlighted by the more than year long election campaign is finished, the reality starts biting, and very soon a much worse reality will dawn on this country, and to China, and to the whole of Europe than people would like to imagine.We have been cheating the global, natural, interconnected and interdependent system for too long and there is no more place or resource to cheat any longer.We cannot ignore that the whole socio-economic system we are stubbornly pushing is false, and is built on a fantasy. We will wake up very soon, either by conscious examination of ourselves and the system around us, or by a very rude awakening through unpredictable and volatile events hitting us from all sides. Read more

Is this supposed to be political analysis? It reads more like partisan advocacy.In any case, we should add to the author's list of extreme political speech the repeated accusation that any one who voted against Obama is a racist. Read more

Why? Do you object to the observation that: "Obama broadly follows Ronald Reagan’s (second-term) security policy, George H.W. Bush’s spending policy, Bill Clinton’s tax policy, the bipartisan Squam Lake Group’s financial-regulatory policy, Perry’s immigration policy, John McCain’s climate-change policy, and Mitt Romney’s health-care policy (at least when Romney was governor of Massachusetts). And yet he has gotten next to no Republicans to support their own policies"? If you object to it, what is wrong with it? Simply stating what has happened is analysis, after all... Read more

Joschka Fischer
laments the fate of the European Union in the wake of the latest round of the Greek drama.

Project Syndicate provides readers with original, engaging, and thought-provoking commentaries by global leaders and thinkers. By offering incisive perspectives from those who are shaping the world’s economics, politics, science, and culture, Project Syndicate has created an unrivaled global venue for informed public debate.